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Sussex County is a community at a crossroads

December 30, 2025

As another year draws to a close, Sussex County finds itself in a familiar but uneasy place – growing, changing and debating what kind of future it wants to build. Recent land-use decisions have stirred strong emotions on all sides. Some see opportunity and economic momentum; others see risk, strain and the loss of what makes this place home.

These differences are real, and they deserve respect. But as we look ahead, there is a deeper issue that should unite us: the need for a development process that is fair, transparent, fact-based and worthy of public trust.

Growth is not new to Sussex County, nor is disagreement about it. What feels different now is the scale of proposals and the cumulative pressure placed on roads, water resources, emergency services, farmland and community character. These pressures do not affect just one neighborhood or interest group. They touch everyone, supporters, opponents, elected officials and future residents alike.

The question before us is not simply whether to say yes or no to growth; it is whether decisions are being made with clear standards, reliable data and a shared understanding of what adequate truly means when it comes to infrastructure, environmental protection and quality of life.

For the public, confidence in the process matters as much as the outcome. When timelines shift, records remain open longer than expected or agency responses appear inconclusive, confusion grows, and with it, skepticism. That skepticism does not serve developers, residents or the county. A process that is predictable, well-explained and rooted in verifiable facts benefits everyone.

Likewise, elected leaders are placed in an unenviable position when asked to make long-term zoning decisions without clear, definitive technical guidance. Sound governance requires more than good intentions; it requires complete information, professional accountability and the courage to slow down when answers are incomplete.

As we enter a new year, perhaps this is the resolution we can share: to insist on a process that values clarity over speed, evidence over assumption, and long-term stewardship over short-term wins. To recognize that reasonable people can disagree, and still agree that decisions affecting generations should be made carefully, openly and with humility.

Sussex County’s future should not be shaped by division, but by a shared commitment to doing things the right way. That is something we can all stand behind.

Gary Vorsheim
Lewes
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